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Re: BubbaInSC post# 88857

Saturday, 09/09/2017 5:58:25 PM

Saturday, September 09, 2017 5:58:25 PM

Post# of 112654

I Call PullShyte AGAIN - That's just a big, totally made pile of doo doo speculation AGAIN.

Cloud and Big data WAS the hottest items in computing....they've been around ALOT longer than you make it appear. As and example Big Data has been around since the 1960's. Cloud computing has been around since at least early 2000's.



More made up fantasies. The only pile is what you just stepped in. How about doing some real DD instead of offering crappy opinions...

The term "Big Data" comes from the large volumes of information that can be collected on the internet, for example, about potential customers and their habits and interests. Cloud computing allows advertisers, in the case of 420Cloud, to distribute the resources for this kind of analysis to mCig's software systems instead of their own. This is the value add for 420Cloud, and yes, programmers familiar with this technology are in high demand.

Big Data Computing and Clouds: Trends and Future Directions

Society is becoming increasingly more instrumented and as a result, organisations are producing and storing vast amounts of data. Managing and gaining insights from the produced data is a challenge and key to competitive advantage. Analytics solutions that mine structured and unstructured data are important as they can help organisations gain insights not only from their privately acquired data, but also from large amounts of data publicly available on the Web. The ability to cross-relate private information on consumer preferences and products with information from tweets, blogs, product evaluations, and data from social networks opens a wide range of possibilities for organisations to understand the needs of their customers, predict their wants and demands, and optimise the use of resources. This paradigm is being popularly termed as Big Data....



...Cloud computing has been revolutionising the IT industry by adding flexibility to the way IT is consumed, enabling organisations to pay only for the resources and services they use. In an effort to reduce IT capital and operational expenditures, organisations of all sizes are using Clouds to provide the resources required to run their applications. Clouds vary significantly in their specific technologies and implementation, but often provide infrastructure, platform, and software resources as services...



Organisations are increasingly generating large volumes of data as result of instrumented business processes, monitoring of user activity, web site tracking, sensors, finance, accounting, among other reasons. With the advent of social network Web sites, users create records of their lives by daily posting details of activities they perform, events they attend, places they visit, pictures they take, and things they enjoy and want. This data deluge is often referred to as Big Data; a term that conveys the challenges it poses on existing infrastructure in respect to storage, management, interoperability, governance, and analysis of the data. In today’s competitive market, being able to explore data to understand customer behaviour, segment customer base, offer customised services, and gain insights from data provided by multiple sources is key to competitive advantage.



CLOUD COMPUTING TRENDS TO WATCH IN 2017

Cloud computing adoption for data needs

Among the various services covered by cloud computing platforms, data analytics, and data management are seemingly leading in cloud adaptation trends in 2017 and beyond.
















Forbes - Roundup Of Cloud Computing Forecasts, 2017

- Cloud computing is projected to increase from $67B in 2015 to $162B in 2020 attaining a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 19%.

- Gartner predicts the worldwide public cloud services market will grow 18% in 2017 to $246.8B, up from $209.2B in 2016.

- 74% of Tech Chief Financial Officers (CFOs) say cloud computing will have the most measurable impact on their business in 2017....

...The best check of any forecast is revenue. Amazon’s latest quarterly results released two days ago show Amazon Web Services (AWS) attained 43% year-over-year growth, contributing 10% of consolidated revenue and 89% of consolidated operating income.
...

...Gartner predicts the worldwide public cloud services market will grow 18% in 2017 to $246.8B, up from $209.2B in 2016. Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) is projected to grow 36.8% in 2017 and reach $34.6B. Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) is expected to increase 20.1%, reaching $46.3B in 2017. Source: Gartner Says Worldwide Public Cloud Services Market to Grow 18 Percent in 2017.



Debunked Again


Les